Author: Faryal Bhatti, Marketing Manager – Norton Insurance Brokers
“Cheapest supercar insurance” sounds like a contradiction, and largely is. Every genuine supercar sits in the highest insurance rating band regardless of which one you choose, and no specialist broker can make a six-figure carbon fibre chassis insure like a hatchback. But that top band isn’t flat. Within it, the gap between two cars that look, on paper, like close rivals can still run into thousands of pounds a year, and that gap has far more to do with parts commonality, claims history and depreciation than 0-60 times, which is the part worth understanding before you buy.
Quick answer:
The most relatively affordable genuine supercars to insure in the UK in 2026 are the Porsche 718 Cayman GTS 4.0, a used early Audi R8, the Jaguar F-Type R, the Lotus Emira, the McLaren GTS, and a previous-generation used Aston Martin Vantage. All still sit in the top insurance tier, but each costs meaningfully less than the obvious alternative within it, mainly due to parts commonality, claims history and depreciation rather than the badge on the bonnet.
What actually makes a car a supercar?
There’s no single legal or regulatory definition, and enthusiasts will happily argue about it for hours, but three practical markers do most of the work. Performance is the obvious one: sub-4-second 0-60 times and a top speed north of 180-190mph, achieved through purpose-built engineering rather than a tuned version of a family car. Price and exclusivity is the second marker, with genuine supercars generally starting north of £120,000-£150,000 new and production numbers low by mainstream standards, sometimes limited to a few hundred units worldwide. The third marker, bespoke motorsport-derived construction, a carbon fibre or aluminium monocoque, and componentry sourced from specialist suppliers rather than a shared parts bin, is the one that matters most for this article specifically.
Why that distinction matters for insurance
A fast car built on mainstream underpinnings, a hot hatch or a tuned saloon, is expensive to insure because of its performance and appeal to thieves, but a competent high-street bodyshop can still put it right after a claim. A genuine supercar adds a further layer on top of that: certified specialist repairers who are often the only approved option, parts sourced directly from the manufacturer rather than a general aftermarket network, and total loss values that can move by tens of thousands of pounds within a single model year as specification and options change. That’s the practical line insurers actually draw, whatever badge sits on the bonnet, and it’s why the six models below sit in a different insurance conversation entirely to something like a BMW M4 Competition, even though the M4 is also fast, expensive to insure, and no picnic for a young driver to get quoted on.
How UK insurance ratings actually work
Cars registered before August 2024 sit on the established 1-50 Group Rating scale, administered by Thatcham Research on behalf of the Association of British Insurers, which assesses more than 125 data points per vehicle including repair cost, parts pricing, performance and security. This is the system most people mean when they talk about a car’s “insurance group,” and it’s been the industry standard for decades, which is exactly why it’s worth being precise about when it does and doesn’t apply.
Cars registered from August 2024 onwards are being moved onto a new Vehicle Risk Rating system instead, scored 1-99 across five separate assessments covering performance, damageability, repairability, safety and security, with both systems running in parallel during a transition period. In practice, this means a used Jaguar F-Type R and a brand-new McLaren GTS aren’t necessarily being measured on the same scale at all, so any specific rating quoted for either model should be checked against whichever system actually applies to its registration date.